With concrete, measurable results, Shape Up SF has demonstrated that real, lasting change is possible. This 10- year public health initiative stands as a concrete example of what can be achieved when government, communities and non-profits make a concerted and ambitious commitment to fundamentally improve the health of a city.

A Collective Impact project between San Francisco Health Improvement Partnership (SFHIP) and the Shape Up San Francisco Coalition. Report prepared and submitted by SFHIP Sugar Sweetened Beverage (SSB) Working Group, October 2016

Shape Up SF Strategic Plan (2015-2017)

This 3-year strategic plan is a living document using a Results-Based Accountability framework. The strength of the plan, and the key to its overall success, is its firm use of Collective Impact approach to work with a broad array of partners within SUSF and communities to develop and implement culturally relevant strategies that meet needs and focus on communities experiencing the greatest inequities in health in San Francisco.

Shape Up SF Strategic Plan (2009‐2014)

Shape Up SF unveiled its five‐year strategic plan at a summit in November of 2008. This plan presents strategies designed to address the roots of chronic disease, and, in particular, address health disparities associated with the development of chronic disease. Shape Up SF’s philosophy is embodied throughout the plan insofar that our work focuses on creating the environments that make it easy for people to be physically active and eat healthfully where they live, work, play and learn. Our identified strategies cover four key areas: policy, programs & events, awareness & education, and data & research.

Bayview HEAL Zone and SEFA

Open Truth Campaign Evaluation

Open Truth Campaign Evaluation Report (PDF) – In 2015, Shape Up San Francisco (SUSF) launched the Open Truth Campaign (OTC), in collaboration with the Alameda County Department of Public Health, Sonoma County Department of Health Services, The Bigger Picture (project of Youth Speaks and UCSF Center for Vulnerable Populations), the American Heart Association, UCSF’s Clinical and Translational Science Institute, and creative partner Your Message Media. In April and May 2015, approximately two months after the launch of the OTC campaign, UC Berkeley researchers conducted street-level intercept surveys with 639 San Francisco residents in two low-income neighborhoods (the Mission and the Bayview). The survey assessed residents’ consumption of and knowledge about SSBs, their exposure to the OTC, and their opinions about SSB-related policies.